Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Diplomacy Works!

Most of the time the results of presidential or congressional actions are not clearly obvious for years. That is why it is so easy for the opposition to demagogue them in the meantime.

Case in point: contrary to the opinions expressed by most experts, Republicans insist that the deal reached with Iran makes it more likely that they will develop nuclear weapons. Last night, President Obama said that it prevented the next war. It will be years before we can point to evidence that definitively proves Republicans were wrong. Given our current media's obsession with balance, the whole question is relayed to the American public as a "he said/she said" kind of disagreement.

But yesterday, in the mere 24 hours surrounding the SOTU, we were able to see a situation unfold in a way that demonstrates how quick Republicans have been to jump on the anti-Obama bandwagon - no matter what that means - and just how wrong that leads them to be.

Of course I'm talking about the two naval vessels and 10 U.S. sailors that were taken into custody by Iran yesterday. As soon as the news broke, Republicans were ON IT. Here's just a sample from twitter:

If our sailors aren’t coming home yet, they need to be now. No more bargaining. Obama’s humiliatingly weak Iran policy is exposed again.

On several occasions recently President Obama has suggested that perhaps Republicans should aim before they shoot. This situation was a perfect example of why that might be a good idea. Because less than 24 hours after these boats and sailors were taken into custody by Iran, they were released. Perhaps the Republican hair-trigger response can be attributed to how these kinds of incidents have turned out in the past under their leadership. Jay Bookman summarizes:

Obama didn’t buy back our sailors with secret shipments of missiles and other weapons, as President Reagan did in attempting to recover Americans held hostage by the Iranians a generation ago. Our sailors weren’t held for almost two weeks by the Iranians, with their ships dismantled and held hostage until what amounted to a ransom was paid, as occurred in an incident involving the Chinese and an American spy plane under President George W. Bush.